Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from A Tachistoscopic Study of the Order of Emergence in the Process of Perception
I S there anything unique in perception that has not already been said?
The historical trends in perceptual theory would support the probability that an area so rich in experimental methodology and factual yields has not yet been exhausted. Wever (iii, 194) once committed himself to the observa tion that new points of view have arisen more frequently in perception than in any other area of psychology; and cer tainly there is more than sufficient evi dence that nowhere else has progress in psychology, for the last half-century, been as phenomenonal nor as extensive in its promise of eventual application.
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